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I'm wondering if the small differential for having a BSN vs an ADN is more common in the acute setting or is it the norm everywhere?
It was different everywhere I worked. At the last position, it was a flat rate for years of experience and then a 3% increase for each credential: BSN, MSN, a specialty certification, clinical ladder II, clinical ladder III, and so on. No one of them paid very well, but if you had several, it could become significant.
I'm in KY and here, the BSNs & the ADNs make basically the same. The BSN's might make $0.50/hr more, if that much. They don't have any advanced standing, either. KY is changing their requirements to be an NP or a Nurse Midwife from having a Master's in nursing to a doctorate in Nursing. If you aren't planning on getting your doctorate, and you don't want to be a nursing instructor, the BSN is pretty much a waste of time & money, as far as Bachelor's degrees go....IMHO.
KY is changing their requirements to be an NP or a Nurse Midwife from having a Master's in nursing to a doctorate in Nursing. If you aren't planning on getting your doctorate, and you don't want to be a nursing instructor, the BSN is pretty much a waste of time & money, as far as Bachelor's degrees go....IMHO.
This is something that bothers me a lot. First are PAs going to be made to get a doctorate before they can practice? also I wish i could hold an advanced degree but there are zero options in nursing for me. The idea of being an APRN sounds atrocious, CRNA sounds boring, education is not for me, and research is out of the question. Guess I have to go somewhere else to get a masters.
I'm in KY and here, the BSNs & the ADNs make basically the same. The BSN's might make $0.50/hr more, if that much. They don't have any advanced standing, either. KY is changing their requirements to be an NP or a Nurse Midwife from having a Master's in nursing to a doctorate in Nursing. If you aren't planning on getting your doctorate, and you don't want to be a nursing instructor, the BSN is pretty much a waste of time & money, as far as Bachelor's degrees go....IMHO.
Do you have a link that can provide some info on KY's choice to require a doctorate for advanced practice nurses? This is the first I have ever heard of any state requiring a doctorate for APNs.
Stephalump
2,723 Posts
No, not retiring or leaving the workforce any time soon, unless my husband hits the lottery.
I'm just very cheap and very opposed to debt. "investment" is a foreign concept to me. Which is why it's my husband, and not I, who plays the lottery.